Abstract

Event Abstract Back to Event What is an emotion in the first place? Time to sort things out Peter Walla1, 2* 1 University of Newcastle, School of Psychology, Australia 2 Centre for Translational Neuroscience and Mental Health Research, Australia Research on emotion has a long history, and yet, we still don’t understand how exactly it contributes to guiding behaviour and how it interacts with cognition, not even do we have an agreeable definition of emotion in the first place. There is accumulating scientific evidence that supports the idea to more clearly define what and what should not be labelled an emotion. By taking various different simultaneous measures while study participants view emotional material it turns out that the same set of stimuli causes different patterns of results depending on the measure and its sensitivity. These different findings mirror the fact that emotion-related processing happens on various different levels and thus deserves a more sophisticated terminology. Various different data are presented that support an emotion-model that defines emotion as the behavioural output of affective information processing (see Walla & Panksepp, 2013). Also, affective processing is separate from cognitive processing and it evolved before language came into existence. Thus, it is hard to find words for deep and raw affective content, which in turn means that survey-based investigations about emotion-related information may not necessarily tell us the entire truth. The fields for implications are enormous and span from basic neuroscience over clinical domains to even consumer neuroscience and marketing. References Peter Walla and Jaak Panksepp (2013). Neuroimaging Helps to Clarify Brain Affective Processing Without Necessarily Clarifying Emotions, Novel Frontiers of Advanced Neuroimaging, Prof. Kostas Fountas (Ed.), ISBN: 978-953-51-0923-5, InTech, DOI: 10.5772/51761. Available from: http://www.intechopen.com/books/novel-frontiers-of-advanced-neuroimaging/neuroimaging-helps-to-clarify-brain-affective-processing-without-necessarily-clarifying-emotions Keywords: Emotions, affective processing, brain imaging, Self Report, Models, Biological Conference: ASP2013 - 23rd Annual meeting of the Australasian Society for Psychophysiology, Wollongong, Australia, 20 Nov - 22 Nov, 2013. Presentation Type: Keynote Address Topic: Emotion Citation: Walla P (2013). What is an emotion in the first place? Time to sort things out. Conference Abstract: ASP2013 - 23rd Annual meeting of the Australasian Society for Psychophysiology. doi: 10.3389/conf.fnhum.2013.213.00033 Copyright: The abstracts in this collection have not been subject to any Frontiers peer review or checks, and are not endorsed by Frontiers. They are made available through the Frontiers publishing platform as a service to conference organizers and presenters. The copyright in the individual abstracts is owned by the author of each abstract or his/her employer unless otherwise stated. Each abstract, as well as the collection of abstracts, are published under a Creative Commons CC-BY 4.0 (attribution) licence (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/) and may thus be reproduced, translated, adapted and be the subject of derivative works provided the authors and Frontiers are attributed. For Frontiers’ terms and conditions please see https://www.frontiersin.org/legal/terms-and-conditions. Received: 05 Nov 2013; Published Online: 05 Nov 2013. * Correspondence: Prof. Peter Walla, University of Newcastle, School of Psychology, Newcastle, New South Wales, Australia, peter.walla@webster.ac.at Login Required This action requires you to be registered with Frontiers and logged in. To register or login click here. Abstract Info Abstract The Authors in Frontiers Peter Walla Google Peter Walla Google Scholar Peter Walla PubMed Peter Walla Related Article in Frontiers Google Scholar PubMed Abstract Close Back to top Javascript is disabled. Please enable Javascript in your browser settings in order to see all the content on this page.

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